A second earlier, I had been looking at Yuna, about to fire back with
some stupid remark that would make her double down and ask why she even cared about my past life.
And now, one moment later, I found myself in a void of white
emptiness. It wasn't like the Purgatory I remembered from before I was
”invited” into this world. That place had felt heavy and suffocating,
like the air itself was pressing down on you from every direction. This
one was the complete opposite. It felt peaceful and calming, an endless
stretch of white visible in all directions that somehow didn't burn into
my eyes at all.
Where the hell am I?
I looked down. My bloodstained clothes were still there, my shirt
still half-torn from the fight. Dirt clung to my hands and dried blood
streaked across my arms. Nothing about my condition had changed, which
meant one thing.
I didn't die.
I had been taken exactly as I was and placed here. The only
difference was that the Wave Tutorial EVENT panel and timer were no
longer sitting at the center top edge of my vision.
I instinctively opened my status panel. It appeared normally, but
another window immediately slid over it alongside a green icon shaped
like a peace symbol. This was what the panel said:
[Status Effect: Safezone]
Safezone Designation: The Greed System Neutrality Committee (GSNC) Headquarters - Azalos City Division
You are currently in an area
designated as a Safezone. Unless authorized by an admin, you can neither
use skills nor use your inventory within the Safezone’s boundary.
I'm in the Neutrality Committee's domain?
A cold feeling crept down my spine. If I had been forcibly dragged
into their territory, that couldn't possibly mean anything good. Yet at
the same time, another thought surfaced almost immediately after.
Wasn't this a good thing?
There were questions I wanted answered. Questions about why I had
been dragged into this world, why the invitation had been rescinded at
the last second, and most of all—
The Soulbound Contract.
As I drifted slowly through the empty white space, a figure gradually
came into view. He stood at roughly my height, his face hidden behind a
perfectly smooth, blank white mask. His clothing matched the void
around us: a white coat with long sleeves, a cape draped behind him, a
neatly tied necktie, white slacks, and polished white shoes. The only
color on him was the strand of purple hair spilling from beneath his
white top hat.
From just his hair, I recognized him immediately.
He tilted his head slightly as if inspecting something mildly interesting.
“So you’re the one. Interesting.” His voice echoed faintly through
the empty space. “I’ve never seen you before, but judging by that
expression, I assume you already know who I am.”
“Yeah.” I recalled, “You’re the one who told us to finish the EVENT
if we wanted another chance at life. The one who said we shouldn’t
become parasites in this world.”
The man paused, and let out a quiet sigh.
“That’s… not quite what I meant,” He started speaking. “You see,
people like you misunderstand things very easily. The Awakened God loves
glorifying their martyrs. They love turning desperate fools into
inspirational stories. But let me ask you something, Devon.”
He took a few steps closer, each one echoing throughout the void like
cleats on a wooden floor, the sound seemingly paradoxical as there was
not even a visible surface in the air. Then, with his white mask nearly
touching my face, he continued.
“Would you die for a cult that doesn’t even remember your name after
you’re gone? Because I’ve watched it happen more times than I can count.
All of it are meaningless once you’ve already served your purpose. But I
can change that for you. All you have to do is to tell me everything
you know.”
“I’m sorry,” I truthfully answered. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
He rubbed the bridge of his mask like someone dealing with a
headache. “Fine. Just answer my questions and don’t resist. What’s your
true name?”
“My true name is Devon Crocus.”
My eyes widened. The words had come out of my mouth without
permission. It felt like something had grabbed my throat and squeezed
the truth out of it.
I reacted with “What the hell—” but the man was already continuing
with his questions. My mouth immediately clamped shut. The following
questions, I also answered truthfully. I couldn’t stop myself from
telling the truth, anyway.
“How did you get registered into the Wave Tutorial EVENT?”
“I was registered into the Wave Tutorial EVENT through an invitation given to me at the last minute.”
“Who helped you get into this EVENT?”
My mouth moved on its own again, “Someone called t—”
Then, the name stopped halfway. My jaw remained open, yet the words
weren’t coming out of my mouth. A new System panel I hadn’t seen before,
suddenly appeared before my eyes. The background of this panel was
colored a deep red with the color of the text being black.
[You are Soulbound.]
[As per the immutable laws laid
upon entering a Soulbound Contract, you cannot divulge any information
regarding your Contractor.]
What the hell?
“Oh, I see.” The purple-haired man nodded, and said, “If you’re not
going to cooperate, I guess we can do this the hard way. I suppose a
little bit of pain should put you back to your senses? You should be
familiar with this, right?”
Suddenly, a sharp jolt of pain began tearing up my insides. “AGHHHH!”
I screamed in pain. I squirmed, contracting my body, trying to dull the
pain and shaking as if it was going to help at all. I still hadn’t
recovered from my injuries last wave, and being hit by Agony again—it
really felt like I was about to die.
A case of literary theft: this tale is not rightfully on Amazon; if you see it, report the violation.
The only difference now was that this Agony didn’t have a duration.
[(Debuff) Agony]
[Duration: --:--:--]
I kept screaming in pain. Sweat beaded not just on my forehead but
throughout my entire body. It felt like my muscle fibers were
individually being twisted. I wanted to make it stop. I kept trying to
tell him about The Deliverer and the Soulbound Contract, but every word
triggered that same panel.
[You are Soulbound.]
[You are Soulbound.]
[You are Soulbound.]
My mouth—won’t tell—a single fucking thing—about him.
And worst of all, I couldn’t do anything to escape from this torment.
When it ended after just a single minute, the pain suddenly vanished,
yet I’d already stopped struggling even before that. Not because I gave
up, but because I couldn’t move anymore.
It hurt too much. Each little movement was enough to make me jolt into submission.
“So,” the man addressed. “You ready to talk?”
“Stop.” I tried to get the words out. “I can’t say it. I want to tell you, but I can’t.”
“Hmm. I wonder why. You knew you were going to die the moment you
invaded this EVENT, anyway. Why did you even agree to having a curse
restricting you from what you want to tell?”
“I’m telling you! It’s not a curse! It’s because of this—”
[You are Soulbound.]
“AGHHHHHH!” I screamed in pain as the debuff came active again. I
could feel my consciousness trying to fade, my vision tunnelling, but it
felt like the debuff wasn’t allowing me to pass out peacefully.
So, in a desperate bout to escape, I shouted out something different.
I gritted through the pain. “The Purgatory of… Lost Souls! I came from there! I—”
[You are Soulbound.]
But as soon as those words successfully came out of my mouth, the Agony debuff disappeared.
“What… did you just say…?”
For the first time, the man sounded genuinely stunned and
dumbfounded. Suddenly, the white void around us began collapsing inward,
folding like paper. The endless space condensed into a single point of
light above me before everything plunged into darkness.
And when I realized what had just happened, it’s just that the white
void turned into a single room with a dim, hovering light bulb in the
middle. A metal table sat between me and the masked man. The air smelled
faintly of disinfectant and old dust, like a neglected interrogation
room.
I leaned forward weakly, gasping for air.
The man set a glass vial on the table with a soft clink. The potion
inside glowed a deep crimson, the glass rim trimmed with delicate gold
filigree.
“Take this, Devon Crocus. This is a [Full Healing Potion]. It will
instantly heal your injuries from the Agony I caused you, as well as any
remaining injuries from the previous waves, should you have any. It’s
the least I can do for mistakenly judging you as an intruder.”
Forcing my arm to move, I grabbed the potion, uncorked it, and
chugged the entire contents of potion bottle. Almost instantly, my body
felt rejuvenated. The sweat in my body suddenly felt cold, almost
chilling when earlier tried to regulate my body temperature by cooling
it. And when I moved, there was no more pain in my body anymore. It had
suddenly vanished.
I wouldn’t be exaggerating if I told you I was in my best physical
state right now. I knew healing potions in this world are overpowered,
but that one just confirmed it might be too much so.
The man slowly removed the featureless white mask off his face and
placed it in the table. I could see the black line streaking from his
eye down his cheek, and with an apologetic expression, he bowed at me
from his chair.
“My name is Tesla. I am a Field Operator under the Threat Balancing
Committee of the GSNC.” He continued, “And in behalf of the Greed System
Neutrality Committee, I humbly apologize for disturbing your
participation in the Wave Tutorial EVENT.”
I glared at him blankly, as I didn’t really know how I should react. I
was about to be killed by him in a torturous manner earlier and now, he
was apologizing for making a mistake about me being an “intruder.”
My mind just drifted to this thought that when someone from the
higher management makes a mistake, much like how restaurants do when
they serve a customer something raw and dangerous…
Without a shred of shame in my face, I said, “I want to be compensated. You do realize you were about to kill me, right?”
I thought the man will be at the very least remorseful considering
that he was being very hospitable right now, but all I got was an
expression that was failing to keep joy from leaking out of his face. He
was literally biting his lips just to keep himself from laughing.
He enthusiastically agreed with a nod, “Yes, yes! You will be
compensated! We have to follow a protocol for these kind of situations
so please follow me!”
As he carried his featureless white mask with him, I followed the
purple-haired man named Tesla out of the room. He suddenly stopped on
the doorway.
“Tesla! Did you get any information from the intruder?!” A woman’s
faint voice was barely audible through the endless noise of printers and
high-pitched beeps filling up the entire room. Hell, from what I can
see through the door, they were probably fax machines, which was
probably the number one cause of office noise pollution before
modernization.
Jesus Christ. For a world with magic in it, this place feels like I’m stuck in the 70s, I thought.
Tesla shouted through the room as well, saying, “No! False alarm! The guy just has a Soulbound Contract!”
My eyes widened. I hadn’t told him that before. I pinned that
question into my mind as soon as we get out of this noise-polluted room.
When Tesla started walking again, he gestured for me to follow him out of the interrogation room.
Rows of desks filled a wide office floor covered in thick gray
carpet. Fluorescent ceiling lights hummed overhead. Dozens of fax
machines lined the walls and tables, all of them spitting out endless
sheets of paper that piled into trays. The air buzzed with the
mechanical whirring of printers and the constant screeching tones of fax
transmissions.
A woman with silver hair in a bob cut and black eyes in that same
white formal attire greeted Tesla. If not for her—well—inappropriately
sized bust, I would’ve probably mistaken her for Yuna with a shorter
hairstyle. They were literally in front of each other, but they still
had to raise their voices to be properly heard.
The woman said, “If it’s a false alarm, Devon Crocus has a divine sponsorship, then?!”
“Yeah!” Tesla turned his head around and gave me a rather long blink, ”You got a sponsorship from a deity, right?!”
Going along with whatever he’s doing, I nodded in response.
The woman moved to grab my arm, “Then I’ll take you back to the EVENT—“
But Tesla stopped her, “No, not yet! Not until the end of the Wave!
The viewers will get suspicious if he suddenly appears in the middle of
the Wave!”
The woman groaned. “Oh, what difference does it make?! Even if he
already has enough kills to make it to the fourth wave, it won’t stop
them from getting their theories out! They’re already suspicious when he
didn’t appear in the first Wave! Just drop him off right now!”
But her complaints went unanswered when Tesla waved her off.
He led us to another room—and when the door closed, silence
immediately followed, the fax noises replaced by the hum of an air
conditioner. The new room looked nothing like the interrogation chamber.
Soft lighting illuminated a comfortable lounge with a blue sectional
sofa, a glass coffee table, and a large television mounted on the wall.
There were even a glass bowl filled with lollipops sat in said table.
Tesla gestured his palm, “Take a seat. The next wave is still some time away, so you can relax for now.”
I let my rear rest on one of the single-seated sofa across Tesla.
Resting on the cushion made my body sink into it effortlessly. If only I
didn’t have to go back out there, I probably would’ve given myself a
good nap into this sofa already.
“So Mr. Crocus, what my colleague said is true. I should’ve already
put you back into the EVENT regardless of my reasons. But what you said
back in that interrogation room was… extremely alarming.” Tesla said as
he fiddled with his faceless white mask.
I blinked. “You mean about the Purgatory—”
“Ah-ah—“ Tesla raised a finger. “Don’t say that word anymore. Don’t
even think about it, especially when you’re out there at the EVENT. If
you do, even I don’t know what will happen to you exactly. Do you
understand?”
I could sense his urgency. I nodded and followed with, “Is that why
you deliberately didn’t tell your colleague everything? And how did you
even know I had a—?”
[You are Soulbound.]
I continued. “I mean, how did you know that I have that kind of written agreement with someone?”
“Alright. I know this is still a bit too early for you to know, but I
think it should be fine,” he smiled. “I’ll answer your questions. But
first, let me tell you what the Greed System Neutrality Committee is all
about.”

